Economy is in the eye of the policy beholder

Reading the economy these days is like taking a Rorschach test: Optimists see signs of progress in each economic report, while pessimists see the end of the expansion and many others host middling views.

Friday’s much-anticipated jobs report was a case in point. While nearly everyone disparaged the news of only 80,000 jobs created during June as “disappointing,” a few optimists saw a silver lining in the report: an uptick in wages and hours worked that they say will put more money in consumers’ pockets and spark a revival of growth later this year.

That was the reading by Harm Bandholz, an economist at UniCredit Research. While conceding that June’s lackluster” jobs growth was “hardly any reason to get excited,” he contended that a strong 0.4 percent increase in aggregate hours seen in the report - the first since February - might signal a turning point for the economy as employers may be starting to crank up hours and production in anticipation of better days.

Pointing to that sign of emerging strength, Mr. Bandholz said he expects “payroll gains will reaccelerate in the second half of the year.” He expects consumers to get a second wind as gradually rising wages and increasing jobs combine with plummeting oil and gasoline prices to increase their purchasing power.

Such a sunny reading of the jobs report finds a ready audience among natural optimists as well as political incumbents such as President Obama, who lauded the report as a “step in the right direction.”

“The evidence is mounting” that the economy may be headed toward a double-dip recession, said Tom Porcelli, chief economist at RBC Capital Markets.

Mr. Porcelli said the jobs report showed the economy had a “pretty weak pulse” last month. But even more alarming was a report on June manufacturing activity from the Institute for Supply Management earlier last week that showed manufacturing fell into a contraction for the first time since the recession.

“This is painting a pretty bleak picture for what lies ahead,” he said. The jobs report “only added fuel to the fire.” Mr. Porcelli dismissed signs of a pickup in wages and hours in the jobs report, saying that was counter to the prevailing trend.

“Clearly momentum has downshifted,” he said. “Activity will slow further as we head toward an already challenged year-end,” when he expects the economy will be roiled by the presidential election and political grandstanding over the budget and debt ceiling, as well as another possible credit downgrade of the U.S. like the one that torpedoed growth last year.

Readings like Mr. Porcelli’s find a ready audience among chronic doomsayers as well as political challengers such as former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. The presumptive Republican presidential candidate gave a gloomy reading of the jobs report, saying it showed how Mr. Obama’s attempts to revive the economy have failed.

Yet other analysts look at the June reports and see an economy on hold moving neither up nor down. They say job growth was anemic because businesses held off making hiring decisions as they awaited resolution of monumental issues during the month.

Among the events that might have caused hesitation among employers was a much-anticipated Supreme Court decision at the end of the month on whether President Obama’s mandate that everyone have health insurance was constitutional, and a Greek election on June 17 that many executives feared might lead to the breakup of the eurozone and cause major turmoil in the economy and financial markets.

Joseph G. Carson of AllianceBernstein is one economist who thinks the economy has been whipsawed recently by businesses trying to anticipate and react to such events.

He said the June manufacturing report showed that U.S. manufacturers, who ship more exports to Europe than any other region, were particularly paralyzed by worries about a catastrophe breaking out in Europe, so they moved ahead of time to curtail orders and cut inventory in case that happened.